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A San Francisco Museum Is Going ‘Nomadic’

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Modernist building with brown stone and large glass facade
Since October 2024, the ICA San Francisco has occupied two floors of 345 Montgomery St. in the Financial District. The museum will become itinerant after the current shows close. (Carlos Avila Gonzalez/The San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images)

The Institute of Contemporary Art San Francisco, a three-year-old non-collecting museum, will soon depart its Montgomery Street location for a future with no fixed address. After the current shows close on Dec. 7, 2025, the ICA SF will transition to a “city-wide nomadic model,” according to today’s announcement.

The museum opened at 901 Minnesota Street in the Dogpatch in October 2022 with a solo exhibition from contemporary Indigenous artist Jeffrey Gibson. Presented as a “start-up” museum, the ICA was largely funded by Silicon Valley tech money. After two years and eight shows in that location, the ICA announced it would move to 345 Montgomery St. in the Financial District, a building co-owned by Vornado Realty Trust and the Trump Organization.

Nicknamed “The Cube,” the former banking hall more than doubled the ICA’s gallery space and came with a remarkable deal: Vornado would provide the museum with two years of free rent and utilities.

A year after they shifted their programming into two floors of the five-story building, activating and simultaneously advertising the previously vacant space, the museum is making way for a more permanent (and presumably rent-paying) tenant. The Wharton School of Business has signed a 10-year lease on the Cube, and will move from 2 Harrison St. within the next 18 months, according to the San Francisco Chronicle.

An email announcement from Ali Gass, the ICA’s founding director and chief curator, said the end of the museum’s time in the Cube is “the start of a bold new chapter.” This move, she wrote, will allow the ICA to “fulfill our mission with greater reach and accessibility across San Francisco.”

misty rendering of torus-shaped earth sculpture in redwood grove
A rendering of Lily Kwong’s ‘EARTHSEED DOME,’ in the Transamerica Redwood Park. The sculpture will be made in collaboration with Atelio. (Courtesy of Svane Family Foundation)

The newly peripatetic museum will kick off programming in January 2026 with an exhibition of sculptures by Tara Donovan inside the Transamerica Pyramid’s ground floor annex. In the building’s Redwood Park, landscape architect Lily Kwong will present EARTHSEED DOME, a 3D-printed soil sculpture.

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The openings of both projects coincide with San Francisco Art Week (Jan. 17–25, 2026). A $100,000 Culture Forward grant from the Svane Family Foundation to SF Art Week and the ICA will support using the Transamerica Pyramid as a “public lounge and cultural hub” during that nine-day span.

In May 2026, the ICA plans to present an exhibition with artists Dominique Fund and Heidi Lau at the now-vacant Pier 24 (former home of the Pilara Foundation’s photography collection, closed in February 2025.)

And in 2027, the ICA will launch a public art project on a 300-foot-tall smokestack at a park within the new Dogpatch Power Station waterfront development.

The current exhibitions at the ICA, Berkeley artist Masako Miki’s Midnight March, David Antonio Cruz’s stay, take your time, my love and an installation by Tau Lewis, will remain on view at 345 Montgomery St. through Dec. 7, 2025.

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